The motivation for this book and
the ideas and concepts that it contains has arisen from an undeniable compulsion. Also the
validation, or support, has needed to come from some source other than outside of
myself. That is because I have never seen or heard of any work like this. In all my life
experience I have found no book, research process or academic program that teaches
anything like what is contained herein. I cannot compare this work to any known profession.
Yes, to an extent this work has been significantly influenced by science, academia,
entrepreneurship, environmental sciences, tourism and recreation, etc. and various other
terms that I have come across over the years like extension, or experiential
learning. But none of these terms in any way comes close to defining or categorizing this
book.

More than anything, this book is
derived from a life of experiences. This includes not only the more “prestigious” or honored
positions such as when I was a professor or “Chief Knowledge Officer”, but also the
jobs that are considered below others. In my life I have had in the neighborhood of sixty
jobs. These would include dishwashing, bus driving, janitorial, holding stop signs for
highway road construction, to being a extension professor and research scientist working for
one of the most powerful academicians in the world, Dr. Richard Ewing.

In many respects the less than
prestigious positions gave me a greater perspective on things. They taught me that I am
no better or worse than anyone else. I am not too good to pick up trash, or clean a
toilet.

These diverse life experiences
have given me a very eclectic perspective on life, and have also provided a rich set of experiences
to draw from. And then as if finally discovering what my “gift” to the world is, in
the last few years, even though I have been accumulating the ideas for my entire life, I am
bringing the collection together here in this book for the first time. Put another way, my
“art” or “music” are the scattered sets of concepts and ideas contained in this book. This
is my life´s masterpiece, at least up until this point in time.

During my life I have now realized
that I have had big questions, and insights that were creating a sort of trail of bread
crumbs that I could follow during my life, looking for answers. And as I have kept a
mental inventory of these questions, and now after getting more clarity on the “bigger
picture”, I have been able to pull all of these seemingly disparate pieces of the puzzle
together in one comprehensive work. Of course I am aware that a person could never claim
the “ultimate answer”, and that is not what I am after with this work.

This is about doing the best that
I can to contribute the best that I have to offer to try to help us all move to a better
place. Some of the greatest books and people have insisted that making a contribution to the
“whole world” is the only noble enterprise that one should attempt to achieve.

There is a significant assumption
that I am making. That assumption is, that if we humans were given the choice, as a
collective humanity, that we would choose to make a world with less suffering, less pain and
more peace and love. I believe that we have, without really knowing what has happened,
let ourselves become the unwitting participants in a sort of prison world. One that
looks, and lives completely contrary to what at least 95% of us want it too be. I have come
across increasing, and irrefutable evidence in the last two years of seeking answers to big
questions that we have been living in a world where a few people, who have a really skewed
vision of existence, have gained incredible power to subdue the masses of people into
an existence that we could very easily change. How this could happen is if many of us made
the decision and started working towards that world.

But this process only takes place
one person at a time. Some ideas along those lines, that provide the basis of how we as
individuals can get started are shared in the first section of the book, for example “how to
live” and “how do we simplify this model”.

The one question that has nagged
my consciousness for longer than any single other, and comes up every time I begin to
work on this document, is “why did we make the world like this?” This question came to me
many years ago, way before I had considered the deeper questions of what it is to be a
human being. Long before I had studied obsessively for years and years to learn what is
really meant by the statement “made in the image and likeness of God”. This question
came to me, I guess, sometime during my teenage years, as I looked at “reality” as if I
was greater than myself, knowing that we have created all of it. We created the wars, the disease,
the pestilence and then all of the other things, the institutions, the concrete
buildings, the cars, all that we live in in this world. And I understood that we could have just
as easily created a completely different reality.

Of course, as I have learned the
truth that there is really only One, this means that we have also created the beautiful
backdrop of nature. But the “reality”, or the drama of the human condition is what we are all
totally wrapped up in and “believe” is so real, is something that we have more direct
impact upon, and then could alter much more readily and directly by changing our
beliefs, and reactions to the experiences of life - in other words, changing our consciousness
at a fundamental level. We truly are the total creators of our lives, and the world around
us.

My understanding of how powerful
of beings we really are has expanded a thousand-fold since that question first came to
me. But some dozen years or so ago I realized that in regards to pain and suffering and
war and disease, that we were the creators of these things and that they continue to
exist because we believe in them. Have you ever proposed the possibility that we
could end war to someone? I have. And their response has always been “war will always
exist”. Well, guess what folks. As long as we continue to believe that, it will.

But beyond knowing that we
actually created these things, I realized that there was a much more powerful lesson embedded
in this. As I have observed nature, I do not see things that are as “ugly” or
“evil” as what we have created like war, pestilence, garbage dumps, toxic waste sites,
etc. And, if there is any truth to the statements that God
is everything, and “God is Love” then
these things are actually contrary to our preferred experience. I make this conclusion
because so many people are complaining about these, including myself. They are not
really contrary to God, because how can One be contrary to One? Although, there is a basic
understanding that pain and suffering are contrary to Love, so we assume that God would
prefer that we make the decision to let these things go.

My realization, which is
clarifying more as I write this, is that, in a way I think that we are actually making all of these
experiences to prove, or teach ourselves, that we are very, very powerful. We collectively,
whether through just plain ignorance, or through manipulation of outside forces
created all of the things that exist and that we experience whether they are positive or
negative. And we can just as easily re-create them and make a new world. But before we can do
that we have to believe in the possibilities, and also come to recognize what we really
are. This, in many respects, has been the story of my life.

Through all of these varied, and
sometimes incredible experiences, I have come to a much greater understanding that I have
truly been the creator of my life. This includes not only he internal experiences, and the
choices that I have made that resulted in apparent external circumstances, which I
used to think just happened to me, but actually I have also created the external too. This is
a very big topic, and not the point of the book, but these ideas must be introduced in order
for the context of this work to have a better grounding.

That context is, that if we want our lives
and the world to change, we are going to have to take actions—each of as
individuals and as a collective humanity.

This process or revitalization and
empowerment can be initiated through individual transformation and through the a
process of designing and implementing regional initiatives that can be
replicated. As these models prove themselves successful they can ultimately be adopted and diffused
to all places. This process of “adoption and diffusion” has been taking place throughout
human history. The problem has been we didn´t have more holistic and sustainable
models that we were Sharing.

This book proposes that we can
recreate the world. Together we can “be the change we want to see in the world”. We can
totally alter “reality” and make it in a new way, and dispose of those things which
we would be better off without.

A validation from a voice
of the past

This work, without my prior
knowledge, is a construct best characterized as a response, or call to action from Albert
Schweitzer:

“It is our duty then to
rouse ourselves to fresh reflection about the world and life.”

In 2008, I was invited by my dear
friend Desmond Green to write a proposal for Jamaica to create a new
institution for learning (included as the case study Reverence for Life University). At the time that
I wrote this proposal I was not aware of Albert Schweitzer to any great extent, or his
philosophies for life. In the past four years I had only one obscure recollection of a
reference to his writing (of course I had heard of him previously but never read his books). This
was a reference from Jerry Hicks on an Abraham Hicks tape where Jerry was telling of an
experience with an Ouija Board. The board, as he relates the experience “spelled out” that he
should read any and all books by Albert Schwietzer if he wanted to expand his spiritual
life and understanding. For some reason this story caught my attention, although I did not
go out to get Albert´s books at the time.

Interestingly, about six months
later I received Desmond´s invite to assist with Reverence for Life University. To my
surprise six months later my wife checked two of Albert’s books from the Colombian national
library, but I hadn´t asked her to get these books. And an online acquaintance, a
representative of the United Nations who knew Albert personally, informed me that Albert
Schwietzer’s life philosophy was Reverence for Life.

The “Reverence for Life
University” proposal was written prior to my knowledge of Albert´s philosophy. The proposal
pre-supposes that education is the foundation for turning the tides of the human
condition around, from an alarming level of suffering, injustice, lack of harmony, and
environmental ignorance to a world where our best efforts demonstrate our embracing a
philosophy or creed of “Reverence for Life”.

Being an educator I have
inherently believed that education is a key pillar of any grand endeavor, especially one to remake
the world. This idea was further validated by a quote of Dr. John Haglin from the movie
“The Secret”, “One
hundred percent of human potential is the result of proper education”.

I am not making any allegations
that one can, or cannot find an example of this type of “proper education” in the world
today, nor do I claim that I have figured out what that might be, and hence put forward
here. The point is that , Albert provided a theoretical/philosophical “ethical
underpinning” that he called Reverence for Life, which, when couched in an understanding that
life is continually expanding and evolving, and that new knowledge is constantly bombarding
us, we must utilize the best of this expanding “knowing” which will allow us to
contextualize and measure the voracity of our approaches. In other words, via
education and learning we can continually expand our understanding to improve our
experiences on the planet. And, in my study and life experience, that we can all tap
into a source of new, and expanding knowledge that is available from many sources, both
historical, but more importantly from some unseen source(s). The personal philosophy
that I have had since 1981 that best encapsulates this is “continue to believe in ever
expanding possibilities”. This idea can be analogized to how our TVs or radios receive signals
via the ether. As I have opened myself to the possibilities of expanding knowledge and
improved experiences, some unseen harbinger delivered what I needed, and often times way
beyond my wildest dreams.

My more recent realization is that
“Light” is one of the most powerful messengers, that it is intelligent and carrying vast
amounts of information and guidance for how to live our lives more successfully and
harmoniously. The problem is whether we are, or can, tune into the “channels or stations”.
This realization about the light came about as a sort of an epiphany as I was working with an
amazing technology called the hyperspectral sensor which will be described in detail
in later sections of this book. But to get back to Reverence for Life as a primary or
foundational principle upon which to build a theory, or ethic for life, this philosophy
must be cognized, or experienced, on an individual level.

Then, as the effects of the
experience create a sort of resonance, it creates a “ripples in a pond” (e.g. Butterfly Effect)
effect as the experience can then move through the collective experience. As this occurs, and we
allow ourselves to align with the, apparent, driving force behind all life the changes
will come “in the twinkle of an eye”. I believe the time for this “awakening” or realignment is
now! There are a great many discussions going on in various circles about “ascension”
and 2012. I believe that these occurrences are real and coming.

Nonetheless, this book is more
pragmatic, and aligned with trying to relay a message that will build a bridge from our
existing reality which, for the majority of people that I meet each day, is a long ways away from
an “awakened” state of being. I believe this concept described as “ripples in the pond”
is a sort of unseen channel for communication for the “collective of humanity” on this
world. Carl Jung discovered and wrote extensively about what he referred to as the
“collective unconscious”. Another possible connection can be made to a phenomenon that is well
documented in biology called “the hundred monkey effect”. Essentially it was
discovered that once a “critical mass” of monkeys learned how to eat a certain kind of nut, even
from an isolated island environment, that all the monkeys in the world had access to
the knowledge.

But I would suggest it is
important to point out that we likely have much greater potentials for creative connections and
spiritual transformations than do monkeys.

In this book, and how I believe
that Albert envisioned the reverence for life is not about one religion or another, or about
right or wrong, or this philosophy or another, but about having a foundational principle
that recognizes one organizing principle for all of life. Upon which a successful reversal can be
accomplished from our current individual and collective conundrum. Albert describes in
simple terms how this experience, or recognition of the universal principle can come
about:

“The theory of the
universe characterized by reverence for life is a type of mysticism arrived at
by self-consistent thought when persisted in to its ultimate conclusion. Surrendering
himself to the guidance of this mysticism, man finds a meaning for his life in that
he strives to accomplish his own spiritual and ethical self-fulfillment, and simultaneously
and in the same act helps forward all the processes of spiritual and material
progress which have to be actualized in the world.”

Finally, Albert presents the crux
of the matter, which unbeknownst to me, I have found my life’s work an attempt to fit
within as it relates to the idea presented above “to actualize [my work] in the world”:

“What I desire above all
things—and this is the crux of the whole affair—is that we should all recognize
fully that our present entire lack of any theory of the universe is the ultimate
source of all of the catastrophes and misery of our times, and that we should
work together for a theory of the universe and of life, in order that thus we
may arrive at a mental disposition which shall make us really and truly
civilized men.”

I will present more from Albert
later, but here it is appropriate to include a quote from another of the greatest thinkers
of all time. It both presents the grim state of our current “reality”, but also invites a
powerful and compelling challenge for each of us, and for all of us together.

Afraid
to Reflect

“What I relate is the
history of the next two centuries. I describe what is coming, what can no
longer come differently: the advent of nihilism. This future speaks even now in
a hundred signs; this destiny announces itself everywhere...For some time now,
our whole

European culture has
been moving as toward a catastrophe, with a tortured tension that is growing
from decade to decade: restlessly, violently, headlong like a river that wants
to reach the end, that no longer reflects, that is afraid to reflect.1”

Frederick Nietzsche, 1888

An
analogy of Nature

What we find co-joining these two
powerful philosophies or observations of Schweitzer and Nietzsche is that what I have
been compelled to do myself, and I believe it is an invitation to every human-Being on
this planet, is to be like the salmon who returns to the source in order to sustain it’s
life. But we are not like the salmon that is urged through instinct, but we must summon the
will and make a conscious decision to move against convention, or the river, to
create ways to address the problems being faced in the world.

The river as I see it is the whole
of the human condition. We find ourselves in a world where there is great suffering and
pain. But this is not necessary. But we are the ones who must bring change about. Yes, I
believe that we can tap into unknown divine powers, and that maybe we have access to
extraterrestrial assistance. But I do not know the second for sure. What I do know, is that if
we want our reality to change, we are going to have to build the bridge to that new
reality. That is what this book is about.

Some time after writing the
Reverence for Life University proposal I began communicating with a high school friend Tom Dooley.
He was curious what I had done with my work for the last thirty plus years.
Through many emails I was trying to show Tom what I actually did for my work. I had been
sending him bits and pieces of various projects from over the years, but he just couldn´t pull
the pieces together, nor could I have expected him to. At one point, and I think he was
somewhat frustrated, he said “what the hell do you actually do”. This challenge was the
catalyst for the writing of the executive summary of the “Vision to Transform the World”,
which is included in Chapter 5. This document was the most complete, although brief,
compilation of concepts that I have been developing over the past years.

After completing the first summary
document, I realized that there was considerably more materials, and specific
applications that needed more elaboration than could be provided in forty some pages. This book is
the first attempt to compile these ideas, and my vision in one place.